With the popularity of P.T. Barnum's circus and America's
game-baseball-peanuts became the snack food of the people across the
country in the late 1800s. Sold hot from a roaster to the cries of
Peanuts, get your hot peanuts here, this popular snack soon became a
valuable cash crop. The farmland around Suffolk, Virginia was perfect
for growing goobers, and the town was soon known as the World's Greatest
Peanut Market.
Suffolk's peanut star was already on the rise when an Italian immigrant
named Amedeo Obici moved his chocolate and nut operation, Planters
Peanuts, to town in 1913 to be in the heart of peanut country. Three
years later, Mr. Peanut was born in Suffolk. The success of the goober
gave the community cause to celebrate, and it did so on the first
large-scale basis in 1941 with the National Peanut Festival and
Exposition, complete with a parade and queen. Today the Suffolk Peanut
Fest carries on the legume's legacy. More than 200,000 people attend the
fete each fall to enjoy family entertainment and pay homage to the
humble peanut.